POPULARITY
www.WGAN.INFO/SparksMediaGroup (Matterport tour examples) --- If you are thinking about getting started creating Matterport digital twins, you have many 3D/360 camera options (list below): (list of officially supported 3D/360 cameras as of 23 January 2023.) 1. Matterport Pro3 Camera 2. Matterport Pro3 Camera Acceleration Kit 3. Matterport Pro2 Camera 4. Matterport AXIS Kit [Motorized Mount (smartphone rotator)] 5. Ricoh THETA Z1 / Ricoh THETA Z1 51GB 6. Ricoh THETA X (likely to be officially supported soon by Matterport) 7. Ricoh THETA SC2 8. Ricoh Theta V 9. Insta360 ONE [replaced by Insta360 ONE X2] 10. Insta360 ONE X2 11. Insta360 X3 (likely to be officially supported soon by Matterport) 12. Insta360 One R - Dual Lens Twin Edition 13. Insta360 One RS 1" 14. Leica BLK360 (1st generation) [I predict Matterport will NOT support Leica BLK360 2nd generation] Which 3D/360 camera(s) should you buy (and why)? On WGAN-TV Live at 5 on Thursday, 2 February 2023, Scan Your Space (a Division of Sparks Media Group) Founder and CEO Tom Sparks will be my guest to help answer these questions: => WGAN-TV | Tom Sparks (Sparks Media Group): When and Why I use a Matterport Pro2 or Pro3 Camera, Matterport AXIS Rotator, Ricoh THETA Z1 or Leica BLK360 (1st Generation) to Create Matterport Tours What questions should I ask Tom Sparks on this WGAN-TV Live at 5 show about 3D/360 cameras? Best, Dan P.S. Scan Your Space (a Division of Sparks Media Group) Founder and CEO Tom Sparks was previously my guest on this WGAN-TV Live at 5 show.
www.WGAN.INFO/SparksMediaGroup (Matterport tour examples) --- If you are thinking about getting started creating Matterport digital twins, you have many 3D/360 camera options (list below): (list of officially supported 3D/360 cameras as of 23 January 2023.) 1. Matterport Pro3 Camera 2. Matterport Pro3 Camera Acceleration Kit 3. Matterport Pro2 Camera 4. Matterport AXIS Kit [Motorized Mount (smartphone rotator)] 5. Ricoh THETA Z1 / Ricoh THETA Z1 51GB 6. Ricoh THETA X (likely to be officially supported soon by Matterport) 7. Ricoh THETA SC2 8. Ricoh Theta V 9. Insta360 ONE [replaced by Insta360 ONE X2] 10. Insta360 ONE X2 11. Insta360 X3 (likely to be officially supported soon by Matterport) 12. Insta360 One R - Dual Lens Twin Edition 13. Insta360 One RS 1" 14. Leica BLK360 (1st generation) [I predict Matterport will NOT support Leica BLK360 2nd generation] Which 3D/360 camera(s) should you buy (and why)? On WGAN-TV Live at 5 on Thursday, 2 February 2023, Scan Your Space (a Division of Sparks Media Group) Founder and CEO Tom Sparks will be my guest to help answer these questions: => WGAN-TV | Tom Sparks (Sparks Media Group): When and Why I use a Matterport Pro2 or Pro3 Camera, Matterport AXIS Rotator, Ricoh THETA Z1 or Leica BLK360 (1st Generation) to Create Matterport Tours What questions should I ask Tom Sparks on this WGAN-TV Live at 5 show about 3D/360 cameras? Best, Dan P.S. Scan Your Space (a Division of Sparks Media Group) Founder and CEO Tom Sparks was previously my guest on this WGAN-TV Live at 5 show.
If you're looking to discuss photography assignment work, or a podcast interview, please drop me an email. Drop Billy Newman an email here. If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session, please visit GoldenHourWedding.com or you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here. If you want to look at my photography, my current portfolio is here. If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, my current Stock photo library is here. If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on GoldenHourExperience.com. If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman, you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here. If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: you can download Working With Film here. Yours free. Want to hear from me more often? Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here. If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution, Visit the Support Page here. You can find my latest photo books all on Amazon here. Website Billy Newman Photo https://billynewmanphoto.com/ YouTube https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto Facebook Page https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/ Twitter https://twitter.com/billynewman Instagram https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/ About https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/ 0:14 Hello, and thank you very much for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast. Today, I wanted to speak to you a little bit about rendering out mp4 video. I know that's probably a pretty exciting topic for everybody. That's what I've been doing recently, I've been trying to kind of put all of that on this workhorse desktop computer that I'm using. And I'm trying to use Well, first I was trying to use Lightroom, right, you are probably familiar with talking about Lightroom for managing photos and sort of working with them and editing them. It also has limited capabilities of working with the video files that come off the DSLR that are just kind of commonplace with modern DSLR cameras. So bringing those videos over there, they're normally some kind of MPEG container format of which I've seen I guess, MK V or chaos is that sort of Chrysler, I don't know, isn't, it might be a different thing. But there's like a hit like MTS or something like that there's a handful of these different little container file extensions that I'm trying to sort out, they're fine, they seem to open to most things, I'm not having a big problem with it. Other than AVC HD, I'm trying to sort those out if I have any of those raw ones around. But I have this library of videos around now, I appreciate having the original files. And if that's important to you, as a media creator, I recommend keeping those source files around at a higher quality. But for me, with a lot of elements of video, especially a lot of projects that are done, but maybe some things that are kind of like an accomplished project, but I want to keep those media elements around, but not necessarily in their whole quality by any means anymore. So I'm trying to go through and render those things out. And not necessarily about a quality thing, but just about an odd format thing like I was just explaining with MK V's and Mt SS and three GPS and mo visa those are quite common, but I'm trying to make the system just a little bit more uniform for the video experience of the videos that I have. I'm trying to render those out. I was trying to use Lightroom. To do this. I was trying to use it in mass to render out and refile names, and all of these video elements so that I don't have any more collisions with these video files. As I'm moving the file names around, you know, image 001 dot mp4 overwrites image 001 dot mp4 created two years later on a different SD card account format. Whatever it is, it's been a problem before I probably lost media because of that error. So to try and correct that I'm trying to come through and render everything out with an additional date name that I was able to add in Lightroom. But Lightroom kept crashing or at least would not render the video that I had trying to get out from the Lightroom catalog that I had the video stored in so it was kinda interesting. I like a lot of problems with that it did a great job with a handful of the sets of videos like the three GP, I think the MTS and mkvs I think it worked through quite well but any of these mo v files and just sits it doesn't necessarily even lag, it's just not rendering frames, it just sits there like it wasn't asked to respond the computer's processors don't kick up at all. It's not like it's trying to render a video but not or I don't know, it's just like pretends like it didn't get asked to do anything at the time. So it's all the struggle of trying to render video so I ended up dumping Lightroom because I was hoping that I could do some automatic file naming and file categorizing with Lightroom and how to do a bulk export of video under the format that I was hoping and kind of have it you know, automate some of that file naming system and export settings and stuff. I ended up switching over to handbrake because I was having such a hard time getting Lightroom to grab onto the video and do anything with it. So I've been having a great experience with the handbrake so far. And there are a lot of tools and more modern systems in handbrake that make the file naming and recompression system quite easy. We can set things as same as the source and use the file name of the source. And that's where he quite well to kind of grab a file, put it in a render queue. With new settings that are pretty automatic, where it's you know, it's kind of like a two or three-click operation to get a new video added to the queue. And so just earlier today, I added 100 dot mo v files to the queue, which I hope are set up correctly, I think there are a couple of mistakes I made in there. We'll see how they render out but I put those in the queue and I'm doing a test of it now. And that stronger computer as opposed to my laptop is burning through those video frames much faster I think it was because I was rendering out about 30 frames a second. So it's almost like real-time rendering. If you were to think of it like you know, 30 frames a second in the video. Well, 30 frames got rendered of that video and just that one second, so it's going through it much faster than I'm used to in the olden days. It's kind of fun to see who knows where it will be 10 years from now. 5:05 You can see more of my work at Billy Newman photo comm you can check out some of my photo books on Amazon. I think if you look at Billy Newman under the author's section there and see some of the photo books on film on the desert, on surrealism on camping, cool stuff over there. This image was a quick screenshot or a quick capture that we made around the campsite, near Lone Pine, California, and the Alabama hills, and it was a cool campsite. I think we stayed there for about, I don't know, four to six days or so in November and December of 2012 cool time of year to be out there. And we were fortunate I think Easter this year in Nevada, we had that rain shadow so that it was just a lot drier on the east side of California than it was on that coastal side of this year in Nevada is when we were there a few weeks before that, but a cool thing about this campsite if you guys were to bother to look it up. It matches the broom Hilda saw from Django Unchained. If you were to watch that, we found that out I think right after we camped here at the spot, then we'd watched the movie Django just a few months later. And we were like, whoa, wait a second. We had just been to that spot. that exact spot right there right where this picture was taken. I think I think there's a scene where it shows Jamie Foxx sitting over on the rock that is currently the kitchen table in this scene. But yeah, it's kind of interesting. I think the shot was set up a little differently, but it was cool to see and you're like wow, that's right where we used to be interesting when you find out a spot that you were or something else was found. And it seems like a remote kind of campsite like this, but I'm sure over the years 1000s of people have been there. You can check out more information at Billy Newman photo comm you can go to Billy Newman photo.com Ford slash support. If you want to help me out and participate in the value-for-value model that we're running this podcast with. If you receive some value out of some of the stuff that I was talking about, you're welcome to help me out and send some value my way through the portal at Billy Newman photo comm forward slash support, you can also find more information there about Patreon and the way that I use it if you're interested or feel more comfortable using Patreon that's patreon.com forward slash Billy Newman photo 360 degree photo work over the last couple of weeks which has been cool and I've enjoyed it a lot. I liked doing the 360 stuff. I think back in June of 2018 we had done a bunch of podcasts about some of the 360 photography stuff that we were trying to do and some of the video stuff we were doing with the GoPro fusion at the time. And that was all cool and I liked that video a lot this time I was working with a Ricoh Theta zone. And I was going around to a few locations to try and get the photographs. Specifically, I think photographs are a lot in this circumstance, but not so many videos. But yeah, really interested the in the 360 photography stuff that I was able to, edit together and capture during that time. So it was cool. But I went to an area in, Central Oregon, that was pretty cool and went up on like a hillside to do some 360 work. And it's cool out there because you can see the topography of how the Great Basin was formed at the well I guess like during the whole era of the Pleistocene as it was for a long-standing period. Like a lake, it was just a big lake out there. And then as things started changing at the end of the Pleistocene, I think there were huge changes that ended the Great Basin stuff that ended a lot of the megafauna that was in the area. And that kind of changed the topography of the landscape over the last 10,000 years to be something much more of the high desert sagebrush Juniper tree exposed rock landscape that we see today and a lot less of the forested temperate kind of mountain climate that we have through the Cascades and part of Oregon, I'm sure it was always more dry, given the rain shatter the Cascade Mountains there. But I think that for a long period, as according to signs posted on my drives in areas where I go hiking sometimes but you know, like when you go up to someplace and it says, you know, this area so such and such time ago had these animals in it where you see like giant beavers, or you see like camels or giant sloths, I guess they added the area so there are all sorts of stuff that they had, that ended up being wiped out and 100,000 years ago, 60,000 years ago, 9:47 to, what, 1020 10,000 years ago, something like that. There are a lot of changes that happened throughout the Pleistocene, I guess during what they call the quarternary period, a period of glaciation. That the earth has been involved in for the last 100,000 or 200, maybe million years. I'm not sure it's the last couple of 100,000 years we've been going in these cycles of glaciation. So you know, we're in an ice age period. So we go into an ice age like we have ice on the Earth right now. It'll be more ice at a point and then less ice at a point. More is at a point less I said a point, I guess it's been going on for what they say somewhere around like 200,000 years, these 30,000-year periods of glaciation to nonglaciation. where like, I think we're coming, we're like on the far end of the Glacial Maximum now. So we had the, with the Glacial Maximum about like, what, 11,000 12,000 years ago? Or is that right? No, it must have been, like 15 20,000 years ago that we're at the maximum, then it started receding, I suppose. That's when we were able to know. That doesn't make sense. We had like the land bridge, like the Beringia stuff where people got over that was probably 15 to 20,000. sea levels were low or they were like 400 feet, they squared along the coastlines. They came over through the land. So that was all pretty long ago. Well, anyway, at some point, like I was there like I'm gonna figure out Wait, let me remember. Let me think back to 15,000 years ago, where was I? Yeah, I wasn't here. So I don't know what happened. But apparently, there's been some recorded evidence that I learned about, and I think it's like Montverde down in Chile. And that's a location where I think they carbon dated something to 15,000 years old, like human remains human element remains, there's, there's like a few locations here in Oregon, where they I guess have evidence of the Clovis people that sort of around like the 1112 13,000 year mark. And then there's other evidence of things that are I don't know within like it's time it's like anything from like 7500 years to 15,000 years ago seems to all kind of be in flux have a date, because there are not many, not many perfect ways to date that. And if it's a cultural artifact, like, an arrowhead, or a pot shard, or a scraper, there's some indication of how those things are going to be created or how those artifacts are going to be created and how there's are going to remain like Folsom points or Clovis points are pretty distinct from each other but they're not culturally distinct from each other. So it could be like a variation of many different tribes and languages and peoples all well unrelated to each other but related with a similar vein of technology for a few 1000 years of you know, their tool use shape was kind of similar because they're all kind of from a similar descendency but I think when you get like more than 100 miles away your language is separate over like a couple of generations. You just got to speak different languages. But man wild stuff anyway, so I don't remember where we started with this. But I was out in Eastern Oregon, exploring the Great Basin, I went up on a hillside and public land and I was doing some 360 photography work with the Ricoh zeta Oh, Ricoh Theta zone. That's what it is. And yeah, I was capturing some stuff on a hillside really beautiful areas up there where those ridges kind of drop in and out. And so it's cool when you get like up to a higher elevation, you can kind of see the pockets of where these legs and pools of water and kind of sat and rested for what seems like 13:36 I think I was saying something about recording some 360 photographs up on some public land in the high desert, in Lake County in the Great Basin area of Eastern Oregon, a beautiful spot over there. I enjoy it and yeah, it was awesome to use the Ricoh Theta zone to be capturing some images up in that area, it's cool when you're at a higher elevation. And with a 360 camera, you can kind of it provides a little bit of a different perspective, it seems silly to see wider, but when you re when you kind of replay those images, and you're able to sort of look around in the context of what's the left and to the right of you, you're kind of able to put together the context of the landscape a little better, a little faster than you could if you just had a series of individual photographs that had segments of the wider landscape captured in those cool at that higher elevation. You can kind of look down to areas that we had been hiking around earlier in the day through some of the ridges and troughs that would be over in that area. And you can look down you know it's like 500 feet down in elevation to what we thought was kind of the mountain top pass and then pass that as another maybe 1000 foot or a couple of 100-foot drop in elevation as it goes down toward The lake basin area. So all that was pretty cool. And what was also cool about it is just sort of visualizing how populated that area had been in the past, I think, you know, before the Western expansion of the United States and as 1000s of years passed by in this region of land in the northwest, it had been populated in that region specifically been populated by nomadic tribes that had been able to travel and subsist off of the wild game that was there, I think a lot of like antelope and deer, and it looks like bighorn sheep by some of their planning some kind of sheep, but it looks like that from some of their, their pictographs and petroglyphs information that they left then the dynamics of some of those populations of animals have changed in the time. Now given like modern day, I don't know, I don't know if we're gonna see a lot of sheep out there in Lake County, but there's one drawn on a rock out there. So they must have been trying to look for it. There's a lot of them in the southwest as he moved into the I think the Mohawk tribes. For him, that's more of a 3000 to 25 2000. I don't know, it's probably bad. It was 3600 years ago, sort of thing. But, 100 years ago I think it was like Captain jack over there Captain jack's stronghold for the Murdoch Indian Reservation area. That was like in the Indian Wars of the 1850s. So the last to tell them but yeah, there's some information about some of the pilot, the pilot Indians, I think the Northern piute that were in that area of Southern southeastern Oregon, Nevada, then into Utah, Arizona, and New Mexico if I kind of understood right, but I know there are some fluctuations in there. And differences in timing and stuff. But yeah, dollar, is pretty cool stuff and is awesome to get out there. It's, it's cool to get out and kind of walk around in scenarios of some public land, where we slash and access and still get out to try and do some photography stuff, even in this period where you're supposed to stay home and there's a lockdown it was, it was cool to kind of get out and try and do some exploring and some social distance conscious. I mean, that's fine with me, I don't, I don't have to be around a lot of people, it's better to do landscape wildlife photography worked while you're sort of in some type of isolation, I'm sure like a lot of hunters are kind of considering something like that to you know, hunters, fishermen, people like hiking or you know, a lot of those solo activities, it's cool that you know, this kind of this time, sort of is provided a little bit of a reset for probably a lot of people out there to have a bit more time to invest in some of the things that they'd want to, I suppose a lot of folks are probably stuck more in their local area but it's a great time too, to get to invest in some things that seem more important to you. So that's what I've been trying to do. I hope you guys are doing well. Thanks a lot for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast. You can check out more at Billy Newman's photo calm I've been doing a ton of updates over there. The airplane is taking off. Sounds like prop plans are about to fly over my head. It's like that scene in North by Northwest. Cary Grant starts getting run down by that biplane. 18:23 That'd be scary. So that's that in the future. Thanks a lot for checking out this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast. 18:32 Hope you guys check out some stuff on Billy Newman photo.com few new things up there some stuff on the homepage and good links to other outbound sources. some links to books and links to some podcasts. Like these blog posts are pretty cool. Yeah, check it out at Billy numina photo.com. Thanks a lot for listening to this episode and the back 18:53 end
RICOH360 Tours Accelerates Photographers Virtual Tour Service for Real Estate and Marketing Companies With the combination of features automated through AI to the highest quality, photographers, and real estate photo marketing companies will complete jobs faster and capture more business. --- ▶ RICOH360 Tours for Real Estate Photographers ▶ RICOH360 TOURS | Example 1 (Full Tour) | Example 2 (unbranded) | Example 3 (Compact) ▶ Book a RICOH360 Tours Demo ▶ RICOH360 Tours - Two Week Free Trial --- CAMPBELL, California, Wednesday, October 5, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- RICOH360 Tours, a service of RICOH Company Ltd, the only truly complete and affordable 360° virtual tour solution under one global brand, has announced a string of new professional AI generated content for real estate. The latest allows for multi-brand banners at tour level. RICOH360 Tours which has delivered more than 13,000,000 virtual tours to help real estate agents sell and rent billions in residential and commercial listings is seeking to accelerate the adoption of professional real estate photographers to its virtual tour platform. From the vast amount of visual data accumulated since the launch of the RICOH THETA cameras in 2013, Ricoh's Artificial Intelligence (AI) technology creates rich content that buyers and sellers value most highly as property listing content in the home search process. Research by the National Association of REALTORS® shows increasingly every year that nearly 60% to 70% of buyers and sellers have come to expect virtual tours and floor plans as part of their online home search journey. Mostly on average only 17% of listings on the top real estate websites incorporate a floor plan and 6% a virtual tour. “With professional real estate photographers accessing RICOH360 Tours platform for such offerings as unlimited active tours with unlimited images for one-time fixed pricing, virtual staging, floor plan generation, engaging 360˚ walkthrough videos and 2D photo cropping delivered through powerful patented AI technology,” said Director of Data Services Yasuo Nishiyama. “Real estate photographers will complete more jobs in less time and become more profitable doing so.” RICOH360 Tours all-in-one marketing solution provides some of the richest contents for property seekers which has proven time-after-time the best way to drive sales for both residential and commercial brokerages and agents. RICOH360 Tours for Real Estate Photographers --- Media release continues in the We Get Around Network Forum (www.WGANForum.com).
If you're looking to discuss photography assignment work, or a podcast interview, please drop me an email. Drop Billy Newman an email here. If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session, please visit GoldenHourWedding.com or you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here. If you want to look at my photography, my current portfolio is here. If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, my current Stock photo library is here. If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on GoldenHourExperience.com. If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman, you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here. If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: you can download Working With Film here. Yours free. Want to hear from me more often?Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here. If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution, Visit the Support Page here. You can find my latest photo books all on Amazon here. Website Billy Newman Photo https://billynewmanphoto.com/ YouTube https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto Facebook Page https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/ Twitter https://twitter.com/billynewman Instagram https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/ About https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/ 0:14 Hello, and thank you very much for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast. Today we're looking at a video or excuse me, a photograph that was taken on film on avatar film. It's one of those Kodak films, there's portrait there's actor, I'm sure there's probably a whole bunch out there like Kodak gold or whatever the cheap stuff that used to get for your, your disposable camera used to be or your little point and shoot back in the 90s. But this was shot on acti I think it was one of the professional-grade films. I have not never known too much about film or film stocks or like the difference between slide film or was it Velvia or porch, or active. But I knew I got into acting because I liked that contrast II just had a crisp look to it and pulled out a lot of blues and a lot of greens that I had trouble getting in some of the other film stocks I was using, like, like I think if you use Fujifilm, you get a lot of all of the tones, that sort of thing. So I liked a lot of the crisp look that I got into color reproduction using this film stock. And this was back in, I think 2014 when reality when we were out at Loma lo like in Central Oregon, or kind of the central cascades of Oregon, maybe sort of north of Crater Lake, but a cool spot up there. And I just kind of like the silver lining of the clouds and the width of the light sort of diffused amongst this photo. It was kind of cool. But I think everything in this role turned out. Pretty interestingly, I think it was from a trip around the token e falls area, which will probably run through a few more photos up. 1:49 You can see more of my work at Billy Newman photo comm you can check out some of my photo books on Amazon. I think if you look at Billy Newman under the author's section there and see some of the photo books on film on the desert, on surrealism, camping, and cool stuff over there. So 360-degree photo work over the last couple of weeks has been cool. And I enjoyed it a lot. I liked doing the 360 stuff. I think back in June of 2018 we had done a bunch of podcasts about some of the 360 photography stuff that we were trying to do and some of the video stuff we were doing with the GoPro fusion at the time. And that was all cool and I liked that video a lot this time I was working with a Ricoh Theta zone. And I was going around to a few locations to try and get the photographs. Specifically, I think photographs are a lot in this circumstance, but not so many videos. But yeah, really interested in 360 photography, stuff that I was able, to edit together and capture during that time. So that was cool. But I went out to an area in, Central Oregon, that was pretty cool and went up on like a hillside to do some 360 work. And it's cool out there because you can see the topography of how the Great Basin was formed at the well I guess like during the whole era of the Pleistocene as it was for a long-standing period. Like a lake, it was just a big lake out there. And then as things started changing at the end of the Pleistocene, I think there were huge changes that ended the Great Basin stuff that ended a lot of the megafauna that was in the area. And that kind of changed the topography of the landscape over the last 10,000 years to be something much more of the high desert sagebrush Juniper tree exposed rock landscape that we see today and a lot less of the forested temperate kind of mountain climate that we have through the Cascades and three part of Oregon, I'm sure it was always more dry, given the rain, shatter the Cascade Mountains there. But I think for a long period, as according to signs posted on my drives, in areas where I go hiking sometimes but you know, like when you go up to someplace and it says, you know, this area so such and such time ago had these animals in it, where you see like giant beavers, or you see, like camels, or giant sloths, I guess, out of the area, too. There are all sorts of stuff that they had. That ended up being wiped out 100,000 years ago, 60,000 years ago, 210 20 10,000 years ago, or something like that. There are a lot of changes that happened throughout the Pleistocene, I guess, during what they call the quarternary period, a period of glaciations that the Earth has been involved in for the last 100,000 or 200, maybe million years. I'm not sure it's its last couple of 100,000 years we've been going in these cycles of glaciations, or you know, we're in an ice age period. So we go into an ice age like we have ice on the Earth right now. It'll be more ice at a point and then less ice at a point. More ice at a point less ice. So the point, I guess that's been going on for what they say somewhere around like 200,000 years, these 30,000-year periods of glaciation to nonglaciation, where like, I think we're coming, we're like on the far end of the Glacial Maximum now. So we had the, with the Glacial Maximum about like, what, 11,000 12,000 years ago? Or is that right? No, I must have been, like 15 20,000 years ago that we are the maximum, then it started receding. I suppose. That's when we were able to know that does it make sense we had like the land bridge, like the Beringia stuff where people got over that was probably 15 to 20,000. sea levels were low, or they were like, 400 feet, they squared along the coastlines. They came over through the land. So that was a pretty long ago. Why anyway, at some point, like I was there, like I'm gonna figure out Wait, let me remember. Let me think back to 15,000 years ago, where was I? Yeah, I wasn't here. So I don't know what happened. But apparently, there's been some recorded evidence that I was learning about. And I think it's like Montverde down in Chile. And that's a location where I think they carbon dated something to 15,000 years old, like human remains, the human element remains, there's, there's like a few locations here in Oregon, where they I guess, have evidence of the Clovis people that sort of around like the 1112 13,000 year mark. And then there's other evidence of things that are I don't know within like it's time it's like anything from like 7500 years to 15,000 years ago seems to all kind of be in flux have a date, because there's not many, 6:47 not many perfect ways to date that. And if it's a cultural artifact, like, an arrowhead, or a pot shard, or a scraper, there's some indication of how those things are going to be created, or how those artifacts are going to be created and how there's are going to remain like Folsom points or Clovis points are pretty distinct from each other, but they're not culturally distinct from each other. So it could be like a variation of many different tribes and languages and peoples. All well unrelated to each other but related with a similar vein of technology for a few 1000 years of you know, their tool use shape was kind of similar because they're all kind of from a similar descendency. But I think when you get like more than 100 miles away, your language is separate over like a couple of generations, you just got to speak different languages. But man wild stuff anyway. So I don't remember where we started with this. But I was out in Eastern Oregon, exploring the Great Basin, I went up on a hillside and public land and I was doing some 360 photography work with the Ricoh zeta Oh, Ricoh Theta zone. That's what it is. And yeah, I was capturing some stuff on a hillside really beautiful areas up there where those ridges kind of drop in and out. And so it's cool when you get like up to a higher elevation, you can kind of see the pockets of where these lakes and pools of water and kind of sat and rested for what seems like I think I was saying something about recording some 360 photographs up on some public land in the high desert, in the Lake County in Great Basin area of Eastern Oregon, beautiful spot over there. I enjoy it. And yeah, it was awesome to use the Ricoh Theta zone to be capturing some images up in that area, it's cool when you're at a higher elevation. And with a 360 camera, you can kind of it provides a little bit of a different perspective is seems silly to see like wider, but when you re when you kind of replay those images, and you're able to sort of look around in the context of what's the left and to the right of you, you're kind of able to put together the context of the landscape a little better, a little faster than you could if you just had a series of individual photographs that had segments of the wider landscape captured in it. So it's cool at that higher elevation, you can you can kind of look down to areas that we had been hiking around earlier in the day through some of the ridges and troughs that would be over in that area. And you can look down you know, it's like 500 feet down in elevation to what we thought was kind of the mountain top pass and then pass that as another maybe 1000 foot or a couple of 100-foot drop in elevation as it goes down toward the lake basin area. So all that was pretty cool. And what was also cool about it is just sort of visualizing how populated that area had been in the past, I think, you know before the Western expansion of the United States and as 1000s of years passed by, and This region of land and the Northwest that had been populated and that region specifically been populated by nomadic tribes that had been able to travel and subsist off of the wild game that was there, I think a lot of like antelope and deer, and it looks like bighorn sheep by some of their planning some kind of sheep, but it looks like that from some of their, their pictographs and petroglyphs information that they left then the dynamics of some of those populations of animals have changed in the time. Now given like modern day, I don't know, I don't know if we're gonna see a lot of sheep out there in Lake County. But there's one drawn on a rock out there. So they must have been trying to look for it. There's a lot of them in the southwest as he moved into the I think the Mohawk tribes. For him, that's more of a 3000 to 25 2000. I don't know, it's probably bad. It was 3600 years ago, so everything but 100 years ago I think it was like Captain jack over there Captain jack's stronghold for the Murdoch Indian Reservation area. That was like in the Indian Wars of the 1850s. So the last to tell them but yeah, there's some information about some of the pipe, the Piute Indians, I think the Northern piute that were in that area of Southern southeastern Oregon, Nevada, then into Utah, Arizona, and New Mexico if I kind of understood, right, but I know there's some fluctuations in there. And differences in timing and stuff. But yeah, dollar, is pretty cool stuff. 11:35 It was, it was awesome to get out there, it was cool to get out and kind of walk around in some areas of some public land, where we still have some access and still get out to try and do some photography stuff, even in this period where you're supposed to stay home and there's a lockdown it was, it was cool to kind of get out and try to do some exploring and some social distance conscious. I mean, that's fine with me, I don't, I don't have to be around a lot of people, it's better to do landscape wildlife photography work while you're sort of in some type of isolation. I'm sure like a lot of hunters are kind of considering something like that to you know, hunters, fishermen, people like hiking or you know, a lot of those solo activities, it's cool that you know, this kind of this time, sort of is provided a little bit of a reset for probably a lot of people out there to have a bit more time to invest in some of the things that they'd want to, I suppose a lot of folks are probably stuck more in their local area but it's a great time too, to get to invest in some things that seem more important to you. So that's what I've been trying to do. I hope you guys are doing well. Thanks a lot for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast. You can check out more at Billy Newman's photo calm I'll be doing a ton of updates over there. The airplane is taking off. Sounds like prop plans are about to fly over my head. It's like that scene in North by Northwest or Cary Grant starts getting run down by that biplane. That'd be scary. 13:04 So that's that in the future. You can check out more information at Billy Newman's photo comm 13:14 you can go to Billy Newman photo.com Ford slash support if you want to help me out and participate in the value-for-value model that we're running this podcast with. If you receive some value out of some of the stuff that I was talking about, you're welcome to help me out and send some value my way through the portal at Billy Newman photo comm forward slash support you can also find more information there about Patreon and the way that I use it if you're interested or feel more comfortable using Patreon that's patreon.com forward slash Billy Newman photo and I'm happy with the seminar so far I've been looking at trying to pick up a battery grip for it you know I did a wedding this weekend which is great shooting a wedding and those are really fun events to go through and a seven I did a pretty good job in almost every capacity I love the low light of it. The way the sensor works is great and super high quality all of those things fit the mark for what I need, but it was interesting I was noticing that in low life the autofocus for that camera doesn't function in a way that I need it to or I'm missing some stuff that I want and that's where I see the real benefit and in some of the older systems I mean even like Can't I contrast base autofocus systems that were in the Nikon or Canon systems for the last like 15 or 20 years are superior to what I'm seeing in some of the expression of what the early Sony autofocus stuff can do. You know it's like in focus, right you're looking at a frame it's in focus your autofocus point is on the thing. It's a contrast point, there's plenty of light on it. You go to auto focus and then your lens just spins out and it does not for like four seconds just spins out to infinity and to see just blurriness you lose the moment completely it comes kind of back in maybe it finally grabs focus and then you take the picture but you kind of miss everything or you just I don't know like there's a lot of times where you're waiting for the camera to focus who really should just be like pull up to your eye it sees focus hit it grab it click it go I'm having a harder time with that than what I thought I might and I think some of that could be because of the lack of the phase detection autofocus system that like the the newer a seven r two has the a seven to a seven as to a nine or a nine right yeah that's a that's a Sony one and like a lot of the new Canon cameras they have this phase detection system is supposed to be some better multiplexing system of finding autofocus but there used to be systems that worked pretty good like my d3 at 53 autofocus points and they can pull up I think I don't know something like that but you know, plenty autofocus points and they can grab your autofocus point even in pretty low light they could kind of get oh that's at infinity or that's pretty close to right next to me so I'll stay there so it's interesting kind of learning how that behaves. But overall the photos from the wedding came out really well a lot of this stuff worked out very nicely I've been really happy with it but another thing that I noticed is with running was running a camera as a device like more like an iPad or like more like your phone you know where it's got it's got some screen on a lot of the time it's got processing stuff going on it's moving gigabytes and gigabytes of data to a card it's just drawing from the battery almost constantly I mean like during a wedding I guess to kind of think of power consumption like this I wrote 48 gigabytes of data to SD cards and so that's going to take some amount of battery energy you know stored energy to write all that data to a card and so in that capacity I kind of do get that it would take a good bit of power to write that much information down to capture it and then write that much information if you think about everything that has to do so in that way and then run a screen and you know run the processing and run it visually and all that so I kind of forgive it and it capacity but what I noticed though is that I really did go through a couple batteries shooting and just sort of a regular fashion at this wedding for for most of the day is like a full day shooting but it really was burning through those batteries pretty quickly like you look at it like oh Whoa, I just I just use like 10% in a pretty short amount of time. And so with that, I was kind of thinking and as it's been the plan for a long time for just I don't know the kind of like a best use case for professionalism what I want to do is get the battery grip that goes in accompaniment with the seminar and the battery grip I think it's it's you know it's like a Sony piece that fits yeah I haven't seen a battery grip before but you know the one where you can throw the two camera batteries into the battery grip you can get an extended amount of life from your camera that way and you get like the portraits or what is it like the vertical shutter release? You know so you can flip the camera up and shoot in portrait mode and try yeah like the size of it the look of it, it'll be an awesome kind of compact professional 18:14 What is it not SLR I keep wanting to say professional SLR but it's an Interland interchangeable lens camera that's rolling right off my tongue isn't it so yeah, it's gonna be interesting I want to go for the battery grip though and I think that could kind of solve some of the problems that I'm having with battery usage issues of the camera kind of coming up dad after two or three hours or whatever it is? So I don't know I've heard plenty of other people about wedding photography kind of complain or grass a little bit about some of the features that are associated or some of the things that make the workflow of a wedding work of a wedding shoot go by a little bit more difficulty with a featured camera like the seminar, I've heard of people that are really into it, too. So you know, it seems like a couple of different things. But low light autofocus is an issue on that camera, I can tell that some stuff doesn't do now. So with that, and with the concept of like what I like to shoot or you know, like, kind of still moving things or landscapes, low light firearm stuff, if I try and get into that more, I wouldn't run into that same kind of problem with as much repetition because you know, you're not shooting a high volume of frames, you're not shooting an event based situation. So it's kind of a different sort of scenario and you don't seem to you're you're wanting to manually focus and take time and take multiple frames of the same thing. And in some of those, some of those more set up Fine Art situations or landscape situations like you're trying to take your time and those squares in with event and wedding photography, that kind of process. It's just it's really fast. You're trying to move different moving elements into different places and get photographs of You're just doing a lot all at one time over a short amount of length of the amount of time that the, you know the event. So not enough is all right. I did great and had a great time at the wedding. How about you are, you know, savage people out of it your food, got a bunch of great photos, brought them home started processing them. That's a really interesting part of me. I've gone through like a big batch of photos and I've gotten kind of used to that over time of getting through a big batch of photos, but it is always sort of overwhelming when you're like wow, that's a lot. That's like a whole big data project I got to go through now again, you don't realize how much it takes to get through a bunch of stuff when you finish it. Thanks a lot for checking out this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast. Hope you guys check out some stuff on Billy Newman photo.com a few new things up there some stuff on the homepage, good links to other outbound sources, some links to books, and links to some podcasts. Like these blog posts are pretty cool. Yeah, check it out at Billy numina photo.com. Thanks a lot for listening to this episode and the back end. 21:08 Thank you
Thoughts about innovative teaching practice. These steps use Microsoft SharePoint, Google Drive, Microblog, and Flickr. Hardware includes Ricoh Theta, Rode Wireless Go II mics, and labs with desktops. Students need basic video capture skills.1. Start with a brief drawn from practical application2. Byline with personal IDs linked to online identities and key pbrases.3. Quick clips using camera moves created by Magisto AI.4. React Sessions to discuss food, colour, and environment.5. Collaborate using SharePoint then port some snippets to shared Micro.blog.6. Prodce 360 video reviews using Ricoh Theta clips that are scraped from Flickr.
LCP Media needs hundreds of real estate photographers across the U.S. to shoot 360s of apartments for lease (and other spaces). If you shoot 3D/360 tours with a Ricoh Theta Z1 – or willing to buy a Ricoh Theta Z1 when you get an order, please complete this LCP Media form: www.LCPmedia.com/TourBuilderX Plus ... Watch WGAN-TV Live at 5 on Thursday, 14 July 2022: => WGAN-TV | How to Make $$$$$ with TourBuilder 360 Hosting Platform powered by LCP Media My guest will be LCP Media (TourBuilder) Chief Executive Officer Wojciech Kalembasa (@TourBuilder) to show and tell us about the TourBuilder 360 Hosting Platform powered by LCP Media and about opportunities shooting 360s of apartments for lease (and other spaces) for LCP Media. Topics Include 1. Sweet Spots for 5,000 properties already on TourBuilder, including: Multifamily (Example Tour) TourBuilder virtual tours are designed to enhance the apartment search. Whether paired with floor plans, videos, photography or site maps, these apartment virtual tours can truly upgrade the experience. Hospitality (Example Tour) Perfect for conference halls, hotels, wedding venues and even restaurants, our virtual tours elevate the hospitality experience by allowing guests to explore the venue digitally before booking. Senior Living Virtual tours have become a a valuable tool for seniors and their families. Virtual tours help seniors and their families navigate the senior housing search with helpful imagery, videos, calls to action and more. Student Living (Example Tour) Students have a lot of options. By providing a virtual tour on your website, you can help student living prospects simplify their search at the website level and help them feel confident in their next home. Commercial Real Estate (Commercial Real Estate) Whether a large retail center, commercial office or co-working space, virtual tours help prospects get a feel for your floor plan and layout before choosing to buy, rent or even visit your property. Healthcare Hospitals and healthcare businesses offer a lot of options, rooms and amenities. Help future patients feel at ease when choosing if your practice or hospital is right for their needs with a walk-through virtual tour. 2. Demo: How to create a TourBuilder tour 3. TourBuilder Kit 4. TourBuilder Features -- Complete Customization -- Lead Generation -- Easy Sharing -- Powerful Analytics
In this episode I give my initial opinions (or more like experience using) of the Ricoh Theta X. More Content: prestonjensen.com Ricoh Theta X product page: https://theta360.com/en/about/theta/x.html
0:00:00 – HKPUG 會訊 + 每週 IT 新聞 0:51:43 – Main Topic 本集全長:1:36:29 Tag: 見字飲水, TVB, CCTVB, sayno4tvb, Intel Arc Alchemist, GPU, Samsung M8 4K …
RICOH THETA unveils new 360-degree camera model: THETA X Hitting the market in March 2022, the advanced model features many firsts for the brand including a large touch screen display for enhanced usability TOKYO, Monday, Jan. 24, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Ricoh Company, Ltd. (President and CEO: Yoshinori Yamashita) today announced the launch of the RICOH THETA X. Designed in pursuit of enhanced usability and outstanding quality, this advanced model joins RICOH THETA's series of 360-degree cameras that shoot immersive still images and videos in a single shot and is equipped with many firsts for the brand: a large touch screen, interchangeable battery, and external memory card. Experience the interactive Multichannel News Release here. The RICOH THETA X's most innovative feature is the 2.25-inch full-color touch screen display, making standalone camera use much easier by reducing the need to connect to a remote control or smartphone app. Other first-time function additions include an interchangeable battery and an external memory card for more efficient and reliable shooting. Smartphone connectivity has also been improved, as the RICOH THETA X no longer requires the need to enter an SSID when establishing a Bluetooth connection. RICOH THETA X also boasts real-time stitching capabilities with stabilization, removing the need to stitch videos – this improves the processing time of 360-degree videos on computers drastically. "Since RICOH THETA released the world's-first 360-degree camera in 2013, it has been utilized in a wide range of fields to expand the possibilities of photographic and video expression. The pandemic caused an even greater need for immersive imagery and virtual tours to boost business efficiency, especially in the real estate, construction, design, and automotive industries—and we only expect that to expand into additional industries," said Shinobu Fujiki, General Manager of RICOH Company's THETA Business division. "As we strive to meet the needs of our customers through the innovation of our digital devices and services, this camera is designed to help streamline workflows and deliver high-quality imagery for business users and consumers alike." Ricoh Company Media Release continues in the We Get Around Network Forum (www.WGANForum.com) here: https://forum.we-get-around.com/topic/16301/page/1/ricoh-theta-unveils-new-360-degree-camera-model-theta-x/
RICOH THETA unveils new 360-degree camera model: THETA X Hitting the market in March 2022, the advanced model features many firsts for the brand including a large touch screen display for enhanced usability TOKYO, Monday, Jan. 24, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Ricoh Company, Ltd. (President and CEO: Yoshinori Yamashita) today announced the launch of the RICOH THETA X. Designed in pursuit of enhanced usability and outstanding quality, this advanced model joins RICOH THETA's series of 360-degree cameras that shoot immersive still images and videos in a single shot and is equipped with many firsts for the brand: a large touch screen, interchangeable battery, and external memory card. Experience the interactive Multichannel News Release here. The RICOH THETA X's most innovative feature is the 2.25-inch full-color touch screen display, making standalone camera use much easier by reducing the need to connect to a remote control or smartphone app. Other first-time function additions include an interchangeable battery and an external memory card for more efficient and reliable shooting. Smartphone connectivity has also been improved, as the RICOH THETA X no longer requires the need to enter an SSID when establishing a Bluetooth connection. RICOH THETA X also boasts real-time stitching capabilities with stabilization, removing the need to stitch videos – this improves the processing time of 360-degree videos on computers drastically. "Since RICOH THETA released the world's-first 360-degree camera in 2013, it has been utilized in a wide range of fields to expand the possibilities of photographic and video expression. The pandemic caused an even greater need for immersive imagery and virtual tours to boost business efficiency, especially in the real estate, construction, design, and automotive industries—and we only expect that to expand into additional industries," said Shinobu Fujiki, General Manager of RICOH Company's THETA Business division. "As we strive to meet the needs of our customers through the innovation of our digital devices and services, this camera is designed to help streamline workflows and deliver high-quality imagery for business users and consumers alike." Ricoh Company Media Release continues in the We Get Around Network Forum (www.WGANForum.com) here: https://forum.we-get-around.com/topic/16301/page/1/ricoh-theta-unveils-new-360-degree-camera-model-theta-x/
If you're looking to discuss photography assignment work, or a podcast interview, please drop me an email. Drop Billy Newman an email here. If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session, please visit GoldenHourWedding.com or you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here. If you want to look at my photography, my current portfolio is here. If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, my current Stock photo library is here. If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on GoldenHourExperience.com. If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman, you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here. If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: you can download Working With Film here. Yours free. Want to hear from me more often? Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here. If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution, Visit the Support Page here. You can find my latest photo books all on Amazon here. Website Billy Newman Photo https://billynewmanphoto.com/ YouTube https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto Facebook Page https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/ Twitter https://twitter.com/billynewman Instagram https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/ About https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/ 0:14 Hello, and thank you very much for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast. Today we're gonna be talking a little bit about I think some of the 360 footers that I've been shooting at the waterfalls, some of the stuff up in the Mackenzie wilderness area, and some of it over like the three sisters wilderness area, so and then there's also cash budget stuff, we did a bunch of stuff on the coast, we did a bunch of stuff on hikes on bike rides, we had a friend with a motorcycle, drive it up a trail, that was cool. We shot over to Smith rock up to a couple of spots over in the high desert area, Eastern Oregon. Today, though, just for a minute, we're talking about some of the stuff that we did over proxy files, proxy files is a nice spot in Oregon, definitely a hiking destination that should be at the top of a lot of people's lists, especially for people that live I guess in the Willamette Valley area where you can get up on highway 126 and head out toward or if you're in the band area, and you want to come up that other way. But then you go up away up the 126, which is the main highway now. And then you take you take a little road that cuts off and that's the old road. I guess that used to be the old path that went overall you know, the mountain range there over the Cascades and then up on over to the part of Eastern Oregon, I guess we continued. But as you come up over the past there, there's a couple of cool lookouts up toward the top, but a little lower down as you're kind of, you're kind of starting your way up. There's a pull-out for proxy falls, and it's a really interesting waterfall. I think it's one of the taller waterfalls in Oregon. I think that watts and falls might be the tallest waterfall, which we also went to just a couple of days ago and I'll talk about that in the next couple of days on this. This flash briefing to the proxy false was beautiful. It was a tall waterfall, the way that it kind of cascades down and sort of blows up mist and creates kind of this mossy I guess kind of rain for his temperament. Or what would it be like oh, we're like a rain forest by him? So that sort of environment right around the place where the waterfall kind of crashes down all at one spot. But we took this 360 camera in there and recorded a bunch of footage and it has come out interesting. I love that sort of stuff. So it's really fun getting over there. 2:27 You can see more of my work at Billy Newman photo comm you can check out some of my photo books on Amazon. I think you can look at Billy Newman under the author's section there and see some of the photo books on film on the desert, on surrealism on camping, and cool stuff over there. 360-degree photo work over the last couple of weeks which has been cool and I've enjoyed it a lot. I liked doing the 360 stuff I think back in June of 2018 we had done a bunch of podcasts about some of the 360 photography stuff that we were trying to do some of the video stuff we were doing with the GoPro Fusion at the time. And that was all cool and I liked that video a lot this time I was working with a Ricoh Theta zone. And I was going around to a few locations to try and get the photographs. Specifically, I think photographs a lot in this circumstance not so many videos. But yeah, really interested in the 360 photography stuff that I was able, to edit together and to capture during that time. So that was cool. But I went out to an area in instead of Central Oregon, that was pretty cool and went up on like a hillside to do some 360 work. And it's cool out there because you can see the topography of how the Great Basin was formed at the wall I guess like during the whole era of the Pleistocene as it was for a long-standing period. Like a lake is just a big lake out there. And then as things started changing at the end of the place to see anything there were huge changes that ended the Great Basin stuff that ended a lot of the megafauna that was in the area. And that kind of changed the topography of the landscape over the last 10,000 years to be something much more of the high desert sagebrush Juniper tree exposed rock landscape that we see today and a lot less of the forested temperate kind of mountain climate that we have through the Cascades and part Oregon I'm sure it was always drier given the rain shatters the Cascade Mountains there but I think that for a long time as according to signs posted on my drives in areas where I go hiking sometimes but you know like when you go up to someplace and it says you know this area so such and such time ago had these animals in it where you see like giant beavers or you see like camels or giant sloths, I guess they added the area to there's all sorts of stuff that they had. That ended up being wiped out 100,000 years ago, 60,000 years ago, too, what, 1020 10,000 years ago, something like that. There's a lot of changes that happened throughout the Pleistocene, I guess during what they call the quarternary period, a period of glaciations that the Earth has been involved in for the last 100,000 or 200, maybe million years. I'm not sure it's last couple 100,000 years we've been going in these cycles of glaciation. So you know, we're in an ice age period. So we go into an ice age like we have ice on the Earth right now. It'll be more ice at a point and then less ice at a point. More is at a pointless I said a point, I guess it's been going on for what they say somewhere around like 200,000 years, these 30,000 year periods of glaciation to non-glaciation, where like, I think we're coming, we're like on the far end of the Glacial Maximum now. So we had the, with the Glacial Maximum about like, what, 11,000 12,000 years ago? Or is that right? No, it must have been, like, 15 20,000 years ago that we're at the maximum, then it started receding. I suppose. That's when we were able to No, that doesn't make sense. We had like the landbridge, like the Beringia stuff where people got over that was probably 15 to 20,000. sea levels were low, or they were like 400 feet squared along the coastlines that came over through the land. So that was all pretty long ago. Well, anyway, at some point, like I was there like I'm gonna figure out Wait, let me remember. Let me think back to 15,000 years ago, where was I? Yeah, I wasn't here. So I don't know what happened. But apparently, there's been some recorded evidence that I was learned about, and I think it's like Montverde down in Chile. And that's a location where I think they carbon-dated something to 15,000 years old, like human remains, the human element remains, there's, there's like a few locations here in Oregon, where they, I guess, have evidence of the Clovis people that sort of around like the 1112 13,000 year mark. And then there's other evidence of things that are I don't know within like it's time it's like anything from like 7500 years to 15,000 years ago seems to all kind of be in flux have a date, because there's not many, 7:25 not many perfect ways to date that. And if it's a cultural artifact, like a, an arrowhead, or a pot shard, or a scraper, there's some indication of how those things are going to be created or how those artifacts are going to be created and how there's going to remain like Folsom points or Clovis points are pretty distinct from each other, but they're not culturally distinct from each other. So it could be like a variation of many different tribes and languages and peoples all well unrelated to each other but related with a similar vein of technology for a few 1000 years of you know, their tool use shape was kind of similar because they're all kind of from a similar descendency but I think when you get like more than 100 miles away, your language is separate over like a couple of generations. You just got to speak different languages. But man wild stuff anyway, so I don't remember where we started with this. But I was out in Eastern Oregon, exploring the Great Basin, I went up on a hillside and public land and I was doing some 360 photography work with the Ricoh zeta Oh, Ricoh Theta zone. That's what it is. And yeah, I was capturing some stuff on a hillside really beautiful areas up there where those ridges kind of drop in and out. And so it's cool when you get like up to a higher elevation, you can kind of see the pockets of where these lakes and pools of water and kind of sat and rested for what seems like I think I was saying something about recording some 360 photographs up on some public land in the high desert, in the Lake County in Great Basin area of Eastern Oregon. beautiful spot over there. I enjoy it. And yeah, it was awesome to use the Ricoh Theta zone to be capturing some images up in that area, it's cool when you're at a higher elevation. And with a 360 camera, you can kind of it provides a little bit of a different perspective, it seems silly to see like wider, but when you re when you kind of replay those images, and you're able to sort of look around in the context of what's the left hand to the right of you, you're kind of able to put together the context of the landscape a little better, a little faster than you could if you just had a series of individual photographs that had segments of the wider landscape captured in it so it's cool at that higher elevation. You can kind of look down to areas that we had been hiking around earlier in the day through Some of the ridges and troughs that would be over in that area, and you can look down, you know, it's like 500 feet down in elevation to what we thought was kind of the mountain top pass and then pass that as another maybe 1000 foot or a couple of 100-foot drop in elevation as it goes down toward the lake basin area. So all that was pretty cool. And what was also cool about it is just sort of visualizing how populated that area had been in the past, I think, you know, before the Western expansion of the United States, and as 1000s of years passed by in this region of land in the northwest, it had been populated in that region specifically been populated by nomadic tribes that had been able to travel and subsist off of the wild game that was there, I think a lot of like antelope and deer, and it looks like bighorn sheep by some of their planning some kind of sheep, but it looks like that from some of their, their pictographs and petroglyphs information that they left then the dynamics of some of those populations of animals have changed in the time. Now given like modern-day, I don't know, I don't know if we're gonna see a lot of sheep out there in Lake County. But there's one drawn on a rock out there. So they must have been trying to look for it. There's a lot of them in the southwest. Is he moving into the I think the Mohawk tribes. For them, that's more of a 3000 to 25 2000. I don't know, it's probably bad. It was 3600 years ago, sort of a thing. But or 100 years ago I think it was like Captain jack over there Captain jack stronghold for the Murdoch Indian Reservation area. That was like in the Indian Wars of the 1850s. So they allowed us to tell them, but yeah, there's some information about some of the 11:52 pirate, the pirate Indians, I think the Northern Piute there were in that area of Southern southeastern Oregon, Nevada, then into Utah, Arizona, and New Mexico if I kind of understood, right, but I know there are some fluctuations in there. And differences and timing and stuff. But yeah, dollar, pretty cool stuff. It was really, it was awesome to get out there. It's, it's cool to get out and kind of walk around in scenarios of some public land, where we still have some access and still get out to try and do some photography stuff. Even in this period where you're supposed to stay home and there's a lockdown it was, it was cool to kind of get out and try and do some exploring and some social distance consciousness. I mean, that's fine with me, I don't, I don't have to be around a lot of people, it's better to do landscape wildlife photography worked while you're sort of in some type of isolation, I'm sure like a lot of hunters are kind of considering something like that to you know, hunters, fishermen, people like hiking or you know, a lot of those solo activities, it's cool that you know, this kind of this time, sort of is provided a little bit of a reset for probably a lot of people out there to have a bit more time to invest in some of the things that they'd want to, I suppose a lot of folks are probably stuck more in their local area but it's a great time too, to get to invest in some things that seem more important to you. So that's what I've been trying to do. I hope you guys are doing well. Thanks a lot for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast. You can check out more at Billy Newman photo comm I've been doing a ton of updates over there. It's an airplane taking off. Sounds like prop plans about to fly over my head. It's like that scene in North by Northwest. Cary Grant starts getting run down by that biplane. That'd be scary. So that's that in the future. You can check out more information at Billy Newman photo comm you can go to Billy Newman photo.com Ford slash support. If you want to help me out and participate in the value for value model that we're running this podcast with. If you receive some value out of some of the stuff that I was talking about, you're welcome to help me out and send some value my way through the portal at Billy Newman photo comm forward-slash support, you can also find more information there about Patreon and the way that I use it if you're interested or if you're more comfortable using Patreon that's patreon.com Ford slash Billy Newman photo. 14:29 I bought a domain name nightscape podcast calm and so I'm trying to build a pretty simple WordPress site that can host a lot of the information about that podcast about that project as a whole. So it'll be pretty basic and it's not supposed to be something that's hugely complicated by any means. But I'm interested in you know, just trying to try to make some different graphics and make some explanation of the podcast and sort of how it works just to kind of differentiate it a little bit. And so it's just like a side project at all. IBM trying to put it together. But I've been trying to find out some ways to do that more easily. So I've already built about three or four pretty usable WordPress websites. And what I was hoping to do is trying to try to take a lot of that, that work that I had already done, and then migrate that over to this new nightscape podcast website that I'm trying to put together, along with another site that I'm trying to put together get together. I'll probably talk about that in the next podcast. But through this nightscape podcast website, what I was hoping to do was take a lot of the way that I've customized the theme that I'm using, and a lot of like the Page Layout stuff that I've already put together for let's see my Billy Newman photo website. And I want to try and find a way to migrate that over to this night sky site, and then strip out the parts that won't be the same, you know, I'll replace the graphics replace a lot of the layout stuff in a way that would be unique and bespoke to the way that I want this nightscape podcast website to go. But it's a little better than ours, it's a lot less work, it saved me a ton of time so that I don't have to go back through and make customizations to each of them, the fields associated with the site in a way that would be like brand new to it. So. So I'm trying to learn about that a little bit. What I've been trying to do is find out, I guess, different ways to do that. So one thing that I ran into, while I was trying to do a bunch of this troubleshooting on my site over the last couple of weeks, was that I'm really in need of making backups of my WordPress sites. And so what I went through and did is I made sure there's ways within WordPress to do this, but I was using a plugin. That's and you should let me know if anybody's listening out there. And they've had experience doing backups at their WordPress site, you should let me know it was the most effective there's, there's like the cPanel backup that I've made from the server side where I backed up the files that were associated with the website. And so hopefully that can be restored in a way that'd be useful. But there are also some complications that I think I've run into with that. And it wasn't as user-friendly as I wanted it to be. And the restore points, I don't know, it didn't feel like it worked for me as well as I had hoped it would. But it did come in use, it was very useful for me to do that when I did run into problems, and I wasn't able to access the site. So I'm glad I had those backups of the cPanel. But I do still have access to the WordPress dashboard of my website, what I'm hoping to do is use this plug-in system that I found. And I'm sure like a million other people according to what it said, I have found it also. But I'm using this plugin called Updraft Plus, to try and make to try and make backups of my WordPress pages. So I went through and made backups of each of the WordPress websites that I've created so far. And first, that was the Billy Newman photo.com website. And then in addition to that, there was golden hour wedding calm. So I made backups of both of those. And then there are another two websites that I'm still kind of working on. And I wanted to want to try and make those new. But I did make backups of those also. And I was able to save those on my server. But I was also able to download those to my local drive and put those on an external hard drive. And the great thing is, is that I can version those backups. So when I make adjustments, or when I make updates to my site, and I want to make another backup of it, it'll make I can make a backup, and then I can download that. And that'll be like the, you know, this was in January 2019. But with all these extra pieces of content, and with all these extra additions to the site, this will be the backup I make in February 2019, something like that. What I'm trying to figure out those. And I think what I've discovered is that what I want to do is make a backup of my WordPress site, let's say in this case, that Billy Newman photo comm back up, and I want to use that to clone and then migrate that over to the night sky podcast.com website. And so I think I found a way to do that even within Updraft Plus now the Updraft Plus plugin offers a premium service where you can purchase the ability to do a database migration for I think, $30, it's not $30 per site, but I think it's $30 for the plugin, and then you get support from that plugin developer for some time, I think it's like six months on the low end. And then if you need support for a longer amount of time, I think it's more money than that. There are probably some caveats to it. But that is an option that I'm trying to explore right now as if I'd want to go through that process of using the Updraft Plus plugin to do a migration on my site where I can bring in a lot of the theme customizations, the theme itself and the, I guess, the database with the updated database over to the night sky podcast website. And it could be an easy sort of one-click solution for it. But I'm also trying to look around and see if there are other ways for me to do an import for a clone of the website and the website data so that I can bring in a lot of the information but maybe leave out a lot of pieces that I won't need because I'm not trying to make an end an exact duplicate or an exact copy, I'm just trying to bring over certain elements that would be that have already been adjusted in a way that I don't want to do the work over for. So if I could just kind of bring in this draft of the website version, that's almost everything complete in the way that I want. And then delete the content that was on the blog, delete the pieces that were you know, over in this section of the site, rewrite and about page and a couple of paragraphs over here, recreate some graphics, and then I would have what would seem like a familiar site that would be on-brand. But it would also be, you know, a new site that would have a lot of new content on it, and it would just kind of remain the way that I wanted it to. So that's sort of the hope that I'm trying to go for. And I guess that the Updraft Plus plugin creates XML files for you to use. And 20:50 I don't know how it works. But I think if you break open the file that you downloaded, you can go through and then and then there's an alternate way of making an upload for that sort of stuff. But I guess the problem is, is like the database. So if you're migrating a site, it's expecting all those domain names to be what they had been in the past and not migrated, or not a set of new links that have these new domain names, everything is going to link back to another site, that it's not, it's not at so the database, I was just not going to make sense. And I think that's what this migration tool is supposed to help you do. So I'm looking into that. And I'm hopeful that I can kind of put that together pretty quickly. I'm also trying to be conscious of my time a little bit too so that I don't spend a huge amount of time and development trying to figure out you know, how to how to go through and fix a bunch of errors that might be created if I tried to do a restore of a backup or a clone of my other site and try and migrate that over to this new domain. I'm trying to figure out a way where I don't have to worry about that all that much, but I'm still gonna do some more research. It's gonna be an ongoing project, an ongoing project, and I will update you in this podcast on my progress. That's what I figured. So I'm gonna do that with another site too. I think I might have mentioned yesterday that we're starting the golden hour experience podcast. And we've also started the golden hour experience.com website. And so I'm going to try and go through the same process over on that site. So I can import a bunch of the settings that I have from golden hour wedding calm and try and put it together in a way so that I get to save a bunch of time and not have to redevelop a WordPress site from scratch again. So that's it and it could work it seems like if I pay just a little bit of money, I can make it work, which might make it worth it. I figured the other news that I was going to get to was some stuff about ebooks. I'm sure you're excited now. Thanks for listening to all this. Thanks for checking out this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast. Hope you guys check out some stuff on Billy Newman's photo comm you knew things up there some stuff on the homepage, good links to other outbound sources. some links to books and links to some podcasts. Like these blog posts are pretty cool. Yeah, check it out at Billy numina photo calm. Thanks for listening to this episode and the back end
Episode 11 : All the Little CamerasHosts this episode: Ben, Dan, Justin and TommyDiscussion Topics: Webcams, Little cams, travel cams...all that stuff Then we talked a bit on the Newest Apple stuff that was just announced and ways and tools we have to use phones for all the other stuff. Links: NVIDIA Broadcast App GoPro Matterport Tile New iPhones HomePod Mini Boom 3D Osmo Action BeastgripThe Director of John Wick Shot an Epic Snowball Fight with the iPhone 11 ProThe iPhone 12’sDJI Gimbals 360-degree camera RICOH THETA
Zero to Start VR Podcast: Unity development from concept to Oculus test channel
We're ready to blame the stars for the blues, snafus and surprises we encountered in the basement of the matrix this week. Whether or not you believe in Mercury Retrograde, when technical difficulties are at their astrological peak (happening now through March 9th btw), Unity development is a moving target that will have you retracing your steps just when you thought you knew where you were going. Installing Unity Hub we learned that we didn't need to install Visual Studio 2019. Ever since Unity version 2018.1, Visual Studio 2017 is the default code editor and part of the install package. For details visit the developer page: Get Started with Visual Studio Tools for Unity. Melanie selected the personal Unity subscription, set up her first developer account and validated her account ID. We installed two versions of Unity, 2018 LTS and one of the latest versions of 2019, to be confirmed.Melanie recalled the time we went to VidCon 2015 and tested the first Ricoh Theta 360 cameras. Here's the shaky YouTube video from that excursion, Greetings from Vidcon, featuring Tay Zonday of Chocolate Rain fame talking VR and the future of influencer culture. Throughout this episode we take a deep dive into the inspiration behind our playlists from the last two weeks, despite saying the playlists were for "next week". This is the music that gets us through the hoops. On Elements, Melanie's playlists from the last two weeks, the tracks evoke a fresh start vibe, combining world music with local performances, classic 80's electronica and the colors of the rainbow. Elements wk. 1Elements wk. 2On The Gamma, Siciliana's playlists are peppered with Joji, spacey house mixes and Tame Impala's Feels Like We Only Go Backwards, to keep you skipping along the deep blue universe, open to the void of glitches, bugs and the daunting curves ahead. The Gamma wk. 1The Gamma wk. 2Will VR development ever become second nature like switching on a light? Maybe when cars fly. Next episode we'll start Melanie's first Unity project, pick a render pipeline, install Oculus integration and get Melanie's Oculus account set up. For more links to topics covered in the podcast head over to our Facebook group and for our weekly music playlist subscribe to Zero To Start on YouTube. Happy Installing!Siciliana and Melanie
Ricoh Head of Global Marketing Thijs Ekelschot at the Street View Summit in London. --- Hi All,"[Ricoh makes] 360 content creation, very simple. We integrate now with Matterport or we're working closely with Matterport content creators, but with Matterport itself as well. Obviously to simplify the workflow for creativity, virtual tours for creating content," said Ricoh Head of Global Marketing Thijs Ekelschot in a WGAN-TV interview at the 2019 Google Street View Summit."Big difference between these two cameras is when we introduced Theta V where the very good high performing camera, but these are only at 14 million pixels for stitch files. Whereas with Theta Z1 we increased this to 23 million pixels, one inch sensor, shooting in raw, which is the feature that many professionals were asking about."How have you liked shooting with the Ricoh Theta Z1?WGAN Forum discussions tagged:✓ Ricoh Theta V✓ Ricoh Theta Z1[Note: All 2019 Google Street View news coverage will be tagged: GSV19 | More news coming through Friday, 4 October 2019]Best,DanTranscript of WGAN-TV Interview (Above)Hi, my name Thijs Ekelschot, so I work for Ricoh and as you might know, Ricoh is a manufacturer of this one, the Ricoh Theta and this one, Ricoh Theta V, Ricoh Theta Z1 that we introduced earlier this year.Obviously we're really pleased with these cameras. We make 360 content creation, very simple. We integrate now with Matterport or we're working closely with Matterport content creators, but with Matterport itself as well. Obviously to simplify the workflow for creativity, virtual tours for creating content.Why are we here? Why are we at a Google Street View conference? Obviously it's our ambition to make sure that there's as many people out there as possible to create good 360 content.Big difference between these two cameras is when we introduced Theta V where the very good high performing camera, but these are only at 14 million pixels for stitch files. Whereas with Theta Z1 we increased this to 23 million pixels, one inch sensor, shooting in raw, which is the feature that many professionals were asking about.So we started to introduce lots of more features for the professionals, and hopefully this is a camera to your liking. So I would encourage everybody to start using it, discover it, work with it in Matterport, Google Street View, any platform, because it's just a fantastic camera.Thank you very much.
¿Imagenes 360 con tu drone? ¿Intersante verdad? Este tipo de accesorios mejoras nuestras posibilidades como profesionales y pueden ser una gran oportunidad Cámara 360º para nuestro dron Dispositivo de gama media y precio asequible. Lo bueno: App compatible. Fotos rápidas. No se necesita edición. Graba vídeo 360º. Lo malo La calidad es limitada. Memoria interna limitada […] La entrada 180. Ricoh Theta S – foto y video 360 en tu drone – Review se publicó primero en Droneando.
Coming up in this week's episode of the GDPR Weekly Show: Marriott Data Breach Update and the Value of Business Insurance, GDPR Adoption Around the World - 1 Year On, Lessons We Can Learn From US Medical Data Breaches, Ricoh Theta 360 Data Breach, Embarrassment for Dutch ICO
Ana Sol-Gutierrez, Maryland State Delegate [D-18], speaks about her work advancing the causes of Latin American immigrants in Maryland. Post from RICOH THETA. #theta360 - Spherical Image - RICOH... Good hearts make the world a better place
Aaron Menenberg, wine blogger at GoodVitis.com and self-described 'wine geek,' joins PIP's Behind The Scenes to host a virtual wine tasting session. Post from RICOH THETA. - Spherical... Good hearts make the world a better place
We have a real world, but some people — including your podcast host — like the virtual world as well. In this episode of Tangible Tech, Steve talks about his experiences with VR and some new tools that are inexpensive enough for almost anyone to get into creating and viewing VR content. Items discussed in this episode include the Insta360 One and One X VR cameras, the GoPro Fusion, the Ricoh Theta, and the Oculus Go VR headset. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/tangible-tech/support
Chris war auf den Lofoten (Album) – Ethical EXIF – Gas: Lumapod – Ricoh Theta – Video: Adam Savage’s Custom Tool Storage Stands – Fotografieren im Herbst Fragen: Bilder weitergeben – Schwarzweiß (Bilderserie) – LR-Presets – (Pilz-) Punkte auf der Linse (I Don’t Know Why It Swallowed a Fly) – Ad-hoc Bildprüfung – Drohnentips – Farbtemperatur (Leuchtpanels) – […]
This weeks #Appoftheweek is Komoot. In Screenz we look at the Ricoh Theta and the #AandBSplit pits Uber against new-comer Taxify. Brett & Aryeh give listeners the usual updates from the MR world with special mention to VicEmergency, The Victoria Government for their VR Bush fire experience and finally chat to this weeks Guest, Joe Nguyen. Joe is the Senior Vice President APAC for comScore. He Manages the Sales and Servicing teams in APAC - Southeast Asia, India, Greater China, Japan and Australia too! Make sure you don't miss this weeks episode.
Jon Powers, CEO of CleanCapital, speaks about the dangers posed by climate change and the need to re-tool our economy to adapt with renewable energy sources. Post from RICOH THETA. #theta360 -... Good hearts make the world a better place
Taro Minowa さんをゲストに迎えて、チャットボット、360°カメラ、Todoist, Slack, iPhone, 音声入力などについて話しました。 Show Notes Visa payWave San Francisco Breaks All-Time Heat Record at 106 Degrees During Hottest Recorded Summer Project Fi Rebuild: 181: UNK Reply Bot (higepon) In my Seq2Seq chatbot, I'm seeing many general replies. How can I debug Seq2Seq output? - Quora りんな RICOH THETA Insta360 の 360°カメラ0 Fake Instagram Account Earns Sponsored-Influencer Money Essential Products LEICA DG SUMMILUX 25mm オリンパス デジタル一眼カメラ「OM-D E-M10 MarkIII」ボディ ライカ DG SUMMILUX 15mm/F1.7 ASPH KFCおじさん、カーネル・サンダースのすべて Todoist Clean up your inbox with bundles - Inbox by Gmail Help 世帯での情報共有のしかた - はまさき Mailgun iPhone - Apple Fitbit Ionic™ Watch Splatoon 2 for Nintendo Switch Pants: A fast, scalable build system WEB+DB PRESS Vol.100|技術評論社
DJ goes solo again discussing the process of ripping up the rule book and rebranding of his VLOG, Drone and Phone. The show can be found on Youtube at https://youtu.be/C8mBXDj5F6E. In the news DJ discusses the updated Mavic Pro, a new POV camera from Sony and a major upgrade to the excelled Ricoh Theta 360 camera.
Esta vez voy a decir algo poco habitual en un podcaster: "No escuchéis este podcast", mejor mirad el vídeo que le corresponde: https://youtu.be/l-twUwKqpsA. Ha tocado probar la Ricoh Theta SC y no encontré una forma mejor que grabando un vídeo para contar un poco sus virtudes y características. ¡Ojo! El final es abrupto, dada a mi nula capacidad para calcular el límite de tiempo de grabación.
This week we talk about Lance's new job as an Arial Surveyor, the potential for many new planets to be included in our solar system, robo racing, and we have a message from an old friend.Follow this link to download the mp3 file: Follow this link to the RSS to subscribe: Irthlingborough Archeological Societyhttps://www.facebook.com/Irthlingborough-Archaeological-Society-681796648511182/Ricoh Thetahttps://theta360.com/uk/about/theta/Formula Ehttp://www.fiaformulae.com/enRoboracehttp://roborace.com/
Takeharu Tone, Ricoh Theta 360 VR camera [ '16 SIGGRAPH Tue 7/26 ]16 SIGGRAPH Tue Ricoh Theta from Bob Yen on Vimeo.
John Kallend headline interview, skydiver and Physics professor dispels the “45 degree myth” and talks about exit order Mikey Carpenter Thought for the Podcast. He’s inimitable Norman Kent School of Hard Knocks Front Cover by Chris Cook taken by the impressive Ricoh Theta 360deg camera Back Cover 1 by Brad Patterson of the most scared tandem in the world Back Cover 2 by Ally Milne also using the Ricoh Theta this time for a swoop landing and Back Cover 3 is Core Skydiving’s Mike McNulty teaching someone to track in the tunnel. Which is your favourite? We couldn’t decide. So we used all of them. There is no banter. What's better...doing more jumps but paying for them? Or less jumps but getting paid for them? French Parachute Federation introduces draconian canopy size / wing loading regulations - are they giving the BPA ideas? Airtec relaxes the servicing requirements for new Cypreses (Cyprii?) BPA relaxes medical certificate requirements for tandem students Why "Nobody Should Skydive"...thought piece video and how it was received by certain sections of the membership Brian and Jack expand their empire with purchase of the steaming cess pool that is uk-skydiver.co.uk and Craig doesn't give a fuck. Return of the skydivingmovies.com strikes back We're British so of course we discuss the weather Lots of listener questions from Markus, anonymous asks about wind tunnel competitions, Matt Kite asks about equipment lifing (Craig almost mentions the war but thinks he gets away with it), Papa G, James Moseley, Jeremy asks about stuff, Matt Brown asks about incident tracking and reporting Brian has been to California again and has his FF1. Only took 13 years! Bigway Beginners X (internationally renowned) was a big success. No thanks to wildly incorrect weather forecast Craig increases his wing loading again and ponders wing loadings > 3 Tash appreciates the difference between tunnel and sky flying. She flies the flag. For something. Probably Brexit. ;-) Tash is touching cloth again, owes beer for a first and is judging the weekend's UKSL If you like the show please tell everyone about it until they tell you to shut up. Thank you.
Mamute conta como foi sentar no trono, Kris escuta e a barba do Mamute tenta se intrometer o tempo todo. (Nos desculpem a qualidade do áudio. Mais uma vez.) Links: SXSW http://www.sxsw.com/ Google FI https://fi.google.com/about/ Mr. Robot https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mr._Robot_(TV_series) Ricoh Theta 360 https://theta360.com/en/ Palestra do Obama no SXSW https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wfsIZioIpdI Palestra Google Self-Driving Cars https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Uj-rK8V-rik DXO ONE http://www.dxo.com/us/dxo-one Programa de desenhar no ar em VR http://tiltbrush.com
Reviews of the Ricoh Theta S 360° camera, Logitech Create Keyboard Case for iPad Pro, Sonos Play:5 Wi-Fi speaker, grow herbs and vegetables any time of year with the AeroGarden, and Padre's Christmas gift sampler with the Audio-Technica ATH-MSR7BK headphones and the Parrot Jumping Sumo minidrone. Host: Fr. Robert Ballecer, SJ Guests: Leo Laporte, Myriam Joire, and Megan Morrone Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/before-you-buy. Thanks to CacheFly for the bandwidth for this show. Sponsors: beforeyoubuy.ting.com ifixit.com/twit - promo code: BEFOREYOUBUY
Reviews of the Ricoh Theta S 360° camera, Logitech Create Keyboard Case for iPad Pro, Sonos Play:5 Wi-Fi speaker, grow herbs and vegetables any time of year with the AeroGarden, and Padre's Christmas gift sampler with the Audio-Technica ATH-MSR7BK headphones and the Parrot Jumping Sumo minidrone. Host: Fr. Robert Ballecer, SJ Guests: Leo Laporte, Myriam Joire, and Megan Morrone Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/before-you-buy. Thanks to CacheFly for the bandwidth for this show. Sponsors: beforeyoubuy.ting.com ifixit.com/twit - promo code: BEFOREYOUBUY
Reviews of the Ricoh Theta S 360° camera, Logitech Create Keyboard Case for iPad Pro, Sonos Play:5 Wi-Fi speaker, grow herbs and vegetables any time of year with the AeroGarden, and Padre's Christmas gift sampler with the Audio-Technica ATH-MSR7BK headphones and the Parrot Jumping Sumo minidrone. Host: Fr. Robert Ballecer, SJ Guests: Leo Laporte, Myriam Joire, and Megan Morrone Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/before-you-buy. Thanks to CacheFly for the bandwidth for this show. Sponsors: beforeyoubuy.ting.com ifixit.com/twit - promo code: BEFOREYOUBUY
Reviews of the Ricoh Theta S 360° camera, Logitech Create Keyboard Case for iPad Pro, Sonos Play:5 Wi-Fi speaker, grow herbs and vegetables any time of year with the AeroGarden, and Padre's Christmas gift sampler with the Audio-Technica ATH-MSR7BK headphones and the Parrot Jumping Sumo minidrone. Host: Fr. Robert Ballecer, SJ Guests: Leo Laporte, Myriam Joire, and Megan Morrone Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/before-you-buy. Thanks to CacheFly for the bandwidth for this show. Sponsors: beforeyoubuy.ting.com ifixit.com/twit - promo code: BEFOREYOUBUY
This week we covered Steam Carnival SF, and a visit to Texas with the Ysleta School District. Our Check this out moments (#ctomoment) include: The Foos, Wikipedia Fun, Ricoh Theta, Finding Images tools and tricks and many more spontaneous mentions. Plus two visitors shared their moments. Thanks Corey (@CVRscience7) and Roland (@EdTechMinded)!
This week we covered Steam Carnival SF, and a visit to Texas with the Ysleta School District. Our Check this out moments (#ctomoment) include: The Foos, Wikipedia Fun, Ricoh Theta, Finding Images tools and tricks and many more spontaneous mentions. Plus two visitors shared their moments. Thanks Corey (@CVRscience7) and Roland (@EdTechMinded)!
This week we covered Steam Carnival SF, and a visit to Texas with the Ysleta School District. Our Check this out moments (#ctomoment) include: The Foos, Wikipedia Fun, Ricoh Theta, Finding Images tools and tricks and many more spontaneous mentions. Plus two visitors shared their moments. Thanks Corey (@CVRscience7) and Roland (@EdTechMinded)!
Another week - Another new studio! Marcus Bronzy and Ace break down what you can do and where on a Segway, Elon’s Musk beef with Apple, Obama’s Trolling Yeezy, and Kanye vs In App Purchases!For a free book and free 30 day trial go to www.howtokillanhour.com/freeFor all your web and design needs go to FreedomOfCreation.co.uk - for an example of their great work check out HowToKillAnHour.com SHOW NOTES 00:00:01 Audible00:00:30 Shouting YOU out! #HowToKillAnHour KILL A BIT00:05:45 360 Degree Photos (called Ricoh THETA)00:11:30 Fifa Maniness MAIN BITS00:15:50 Shegways Legislation breakdown00:24:50 Off Road Segway00:27:15 Ace’s Leg Update(listen to EP 09 called “B+Ace=Ment” for full breakdown)00:30:00 How To Oil An Hour / Leg00:31:11 Tesla vs Apple (Watch)00:34:55 Apple Segway / iHome00:37:55 Audible00:40:36 Obama The Troll00:50:10 Kanye In Apps!00:52:50 Most Awkward Convo00:56:55 Audible / FreedomOfCreation.co.uk See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
http://www.adorama.com360-degree panorama photos have never been easier! The Ricoh Theta M15 features two fisheye lenses on opposing sides of the camera that combine into a full 360-degree view of your world! Related product at Adorama:Ricoh Theta M15 360 Degree Spherical Panorama Camera, Whitehttp://www.adorama.com/irctm15wt.html?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=social&utm_content=video&utm_campaign=Ricoh%20Theta%20M15%3A%20Product%20Overview%20with%20Martin%20DoreyRicoh Theta M15 360 Degree Spherical Panorama Camera, Bluehttp://www.adorama.com/irctm15bl.html?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=social&utm_content=video&utm_campaign=Ricoh%20Theta%20M15%3A%20Product%20Overview%20with%20Martin%20DoreyRicoh Theta M15 360 Degree Spherical Panorama Camera, Yellowhttp://www.adorama.com/irctm15yl.html?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=social&utm_content=video&utm_campaign=Ricoh%20Theta%20M15%3A%20Product%20Overview%20with%20Martin%20DoreyRicoh Theta M15 360 Degree Spherical Panorama Camera, Pinkhttp://www.adorama.com/irctm15pk.html?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=social&utm_content=video&utm_campaign=Ricoh%20Theta%20M15%3A%20Product%20Overview%20with%20Martin%20DoreyLike, share, and comment on the video below...let's get the conversation started!If you have questions, share them with us at: adotv@adorama.com
Como você imaginava o futuro quando criança? Carros voadores? Teletransporte? Se sua resposta foi "realidade virtual", bem-vindo ao futuro. No FAQ:21 #007 quebramos o protocolo e convidamos nosso amigo, diretor e maior autoridade em VR no Brasil Ricardo "Mamute" Laganaro (@laganaro) pra um papo descontraído sobre a realidade virtual do presente e, por que não, do futuro. Aperte o play, vista seus óculos e não deixe ninguém te empurrar. ;) — WeCast App http://www.wecastapp.com/lng/pt/ Sync Folders Pro http://www.greenworldsoft.com/sync-folders-pro-help.php Apple Music https://www.apple.com/music/ MacMagazine no Ar com Leo Otsuka https://macmagazine.com.br/2015/06/03/macmagazine-no-ar-133-bug-no-unicode-rumores-batimentos-cardiacos-no-watch-os-1-0-1-wwdc-2015-e-mais/ Oculus https://www.oculus.com/en-us/ Samsung Gear VR http://www.samsung.com/global/microsite/gearvr/ Google Cardboard https://www.google.com/get/cardboard/ Avicii - Waiting For Love (360 Video) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=edcJ_JNeyhg Milk VR https://milkvr.com/ Google Spotlight Stories https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.google.android.spotlightstories&hl=en Vrse - Virtual Reality http://vrse.com Periscope https://www.periscope.tv/ Ricoh Theta https://theta360.com/en/ Oculus Rift Prank Roller Coaster https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Odax7F3tWhM Magic Leap http://www.magicleap.com/#/home
このページをウェブブラウザで見る: リンク backspace.fm #063は、前回に引き続きPinterestコミュニティーマネージャのユカさんをゲストにお迎えして、Pinterestの魅力についてたっぷり語って頂きました。正直、僕もPinterestは知っていたものの、自分にはあまり向かないサービスかなと、積極的に使ってなかったのですが、今回ユカさんの話を聞いて、目から鱗でした。この収録以降、Twitter、Facebookに並ぶ定番サイトとして活用するようになったので、みなさんにも参考になれば幸いです。 audio 要素はサポートされていません Download MP3 (22.7MB) 今週のスペシャル Pinterest について Pinterest どんなサービスなのか どんな使い方をすればいいのか ビデオ コミュニティマネージャーってどんな仕事? We're helping millions of people feel more inspired in their everyday lives. Join us. About Pinterest Pinterest Japan (@PinterestJP) Twitter Blossomlink 今週のガジェット マイクロソフトからもついにウェアラブル端末が、Microsoft Band発表 : ギズモード・ジャパン RINGLY Smart Jewelry and Accessories 360度撮影カメラ『RICOH THETA』にニューモデル! 動画撮影などに対応 | ガジェット通信 「インクがいらないペン」をピニンファリーナが発売 « WIRED.jp 国内初のLTE対応8型WindowsタブレットEveryPad Pro発表、ヤマダ電機とデルの共同開発 - Engadget Japanese 次週予告・告知 今週のbackspace.fmはいかがだったでしょうか? おかげさまで、iTunesのPodcast配信も好調です。 ぜひ気に入ったら購読して頂けると幸いです。 番組中に紹介したネタのリンクはURL backspace.fm から参照してください。 番組内容に関するフィードバックやリクエストなども #(ハッシュタグ)backspacefm にてお待ちしてます。 iTunesのレビューも大変参考になるので、気に入ったらレビューしていただけるとうれしいです!